Posters - Human-wildlife conflict mitigation (Solutions)
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Programme
| Wednesday, July 8, 2026 |
| 10:00 AM - 11:00 AM |
| Poster area |
Speakers and Presentation Titles
Ms. Fleur Bokma
Utrecht University
Landscapes of cues - a conceptual framework for understanding cues in shaping human-wildlife coexistence
Mr. Chandrapratap Singh Chandel
Wildlife Institute of India
Holy yet Hindered: Spatial Ecology of a Large Herbivore and Its Consequences for Indian Agriculture
Ms. Priyanka Das
University Of Cambridge
More than meets the eye: addressing the drivers of human-elephant conflict through social-ecological restoration
Ms. Trishita Debnath
Vidyasagar University
Spatial Mismatch between Elephant Habitat Suitability and Landscape Accessibility as Driver of Human Elephant Conflict
Dr. Elliot Fisher
Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh
Understanding fire conflict through stakeholder mapping in Madagascar's grassy biomes
Dr. Mark Hulme
University Of The West Indies
Acoustic and community surveys of the critically endangered Trinidad Piping-guan point towards potential human-wildlife conflict
Mr. Chetan Ashok Iragar
Masters Student
Technical University Dresden
Ecological Knowledge and Drivers of Tolerance towards Wolf and Hyena in Purulia District, West Bengal
Ms. Lorraine Jowa
Wildlife Conservation Action
Farming on the edge of H.E.L.L : HUMAN WILDLIFE CONFLICT IN AGRICULTURAL COMMUNITIES.
Ms. Ariadne Kibbelaar
Former Master Student, University Of Helsinki
Complex drivers of human-carnivore interactions: Pastoralist perceptions and reported change in Laikipia, Kenya
Joe Langley
University Of Cambridge
Forecasting human-elephant conflict across time and space
Ms. Maren Lechner
University Of Oxford
GPS collar data predicts impacts of electric fencing on human-elephant conflict in North Luangwa, Zambia
Dr. Kota Mameno
Hokkaido University
Which species should be prioritized? Public preferences for mitigating human–wildlife conflict.
Ms. Steluta Manolache
University Of Bucharest
European perspectives on human-large carnivore coexistence
Dr. Brady Mattsson
Institute of Wildlife Biology and Game Management; BOKU University, Vienna Austria
Multi-method approach to address bear-based conflicts at the local level: a Romanian case study
Ms. Andra Neagu
University Of Bucharest
Wildlife at Risk: A Media-Based Analysis of Wildlife Poaching in Romania
Ms. Amy Newsom
Universiteit Utrecht Copernicus Institute Of Sustainable Development
The impact of landcover on wild boar damage to agricultural grasslands in the Western Carpathians
Dr. Shweta Shivakumar
Nature Conservation Foundation
A rights-based approach to human-wildlife conflict
Ms. Prabina Shrestha
University of Inland Norway
Claws and consequences: human-tiger conflict and community responses in Bardiya National Park, Nepal
Mr. Christopher Wang
FreakLabs
Beyond Sound: The Evolution of Behavioral Playback Experiments in Conservation
Dr. Dawit Mamo Zegeye
Aksum University
Crop damage by African elephants assessment in kaftasheraro national park, Ethiopia